The Dark Evolution of Conversion Therapy: A Harmful Legacy
In a country where freedom of speech is often touted as a fundamental right, it's astonishing to see how selectively this principle is applied. When the expression in question reinforces an old hierarchy and helps preserve who belongs without apology, the rhetoric suddenly becomes noble. But for Black people, this move should be recognized on sight – it's a familiar pattern of domination masquerading as guidance.A Legacy of Pathologizing Difference
Conversion therapy did not emerge out of nowhere; it belongs to an older American tradition of pathologizing difference and building institutions to manage it. Scholars have shown how the early development of marriage and family therapy was entangled with eugenics, including the influence of Paul Popenoe, a prominent eugenicist later known as the father of marriage counseling. This history matters because it reminds us that the helping professions in this country have not always been about healing; they've also been used to sort people into the fit and the unfit.
The Evolution of Harmful Ideology
When a society decides certain people are a problem, it doesn't start with open cruelty. It begins with experts, diagnoses, treatment plans, and soft voices in professional offices. This is how harmful ideology survives history: it evolves, learns new language, and trades in old uniforms for lab coats, counseling licenses, policy briefs, and constitutional arguments. Conversion therapy looks like this – not a new moral debate or brave act of dissent, but an evolution of an old tactic.
The Burden Falls Unevenly
The American Medical Association's issue brief notes that evidence does not support the supposed efficacy of sexual-orientation change efforts and highlights long-term harm, including depression, anxiety, lowered self-esteem, intrusive imagery, sexual dysfunction, social isolation, and elevated suicide risk. One study found 77% of participants reported significant long-term harm. Moreover, racial inequity is a pressing concern: Black and Hispanic men were more likely to report experiencing conversion therapy than non-Hispanic white men.
The legacy of conversion therapy is a dark reminder that even in the name of 'helping' or 'guidance,' harm can be inflicted unevenly, particularly on marginalized communities. It's essential for us to recognize this pattern and acknowledge the burden it places on those who are already vulnerable. By understanding the evolution of harmful ideology, we can work towards creating a more just society where everyone has an equal chance to thrive.





